Cracked it open and it tastes glorious


Moderators: greatmutah, GuitarBilly
Slobber Rod wrote: I got my hand stuck in my ass
newholland wrote:i don't think whiskey ages once it's bottled... it's just an old batch of whiskey not to say it can't be good, but i just don't think it really changes much in the glass with a few years on it.
Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
ajaxlepinski wrote:I wonder if they made whiskey differently back then?
Fermentation yeast may have changed a bit, since then?
My buddy's boss's father passed in the mid 2000's - the boss gave my buddy two unopened bottles of his Dad's Dewars with NY State Tax Stamps dated from 1968.
Four of us pounded down that shit in two days... and it did seem noticeably better than what is currently for sale,
BroSlinger wrote:ajaxlepinski wrote:I wonder if they made whiskey differently back then?
Fermentation yeast may have changed a bit, since then?
My buddy's boss's father passed in the mid 2000's - the boss gave my buddy two unopened bottles of his Dad's Dewars with NY State Tax Stamps dated from 1968.
Four of us pounded down that shit in two days... and it did seem noticeably better than what is currently for sale,
FTMP, they make it the same way, and big distilleries recreate the same yeast over and over in a lab (unlike bushleague microbreweries that regrow a culture into oblivion).
That said, a company like Dewars was premium in 1968. Now, it's mid shelf. They have surely found 50 ways to make it more cheaply and in larger batches. They've probably been bought and sold 50 times. They may use cheaper grain, cheaper barrels, etc. (fwiw, good bourbon barrels have become much more scarce for the Scotch producers to use, so they have to make due with crummier barrels or alternatives like sherry/brandy barrels>)
so, it's like buying nautica cologne at walgreens now vs buying it at nordstrom 30 years ago. They figured out a way to make it more profitable even if quality suffered.
distillation has been the same for like 600 years.
Walt wrote:But when the hour is nigh, and the lights are low, and I got a little toothpick of a shwag joint in my teeth, and my friends want to hear me play "Into the Void", or "TNT", "or "Cemetery Gates"...I plug my 600 dollar guitar into my 150 dollar amp, and I am a Rawk gawd.
nightflameauto wrote:Whiskey that old deserves a careful comparison with the modern equivalent to see if there are major differences.
BroSlinger wrote:ajaxlepinski wrote:I wonder if they made whiskey differently back then?
Fermentation yeast may have changed a bit, since then?
My buddy's boss's father passed in the mid 2000's - the boss gave my buddy two unopened bottles of his Dad's Dewars with NY State Tax Stamps dated from 1968.
Four of us pounded down that shit in two days... and it did seem noticeably better than what is currently for sale,
FTMP, they make it the same way, and big distilleries recreate the same yeast over and over in a lab (unlike bushleague microbreweries that regrow a culture into oblivion).
That said, a company like Dewars was premium in 1968. Now, it's mid shelf. They have surely found 50 ways to make it more cheaply and in larger batches. They've probably been bought and sold 50 times. They may use cheaper grain, cheaper barrels, etc. (fwiw, good bourbon barrels have become much more scarce for the Scotch producers to use, so they have to make due with crummier barrels or alternatives like sherry/brandy barrels>)
so, it's like buying nautica cologne at walgreens now vs buying it at nordstrom 30 years ago. They figured out a way to make it more profitable even if quality suffered.
distillation has been the same for like 600 years.